1
SHAPE
TYPES OF TRIANGLE .................................................................................... 2
TYPES OF QUADRILATERAL ....................................................................... 3
TYPES OF POLYGON .................................................................................... 4
PYTHAGORAS’ THEOREM ............................................................................ 5
INTERNAL AND EXTERNAL ANGLES .......................................................... 7
ARCS AND SECTORS .................................................................................... 9
TRIGONOMETRY .......................................................................................... 11
SIMILAR FIGURES ....................................................................................... 13
AREAS AND VOLUMES OF SIMILAR FIGURES ........................................ 14
VOLUME AND AREA FORMULAE .............................................................. 16
VECTORS ..................................................................................................... 18
CIRCLE LAWS .............................................................................................. 20
TANGENT LAWS .......................................................................................... 21
SINE AND COSINE RULES .......................................................................... 22
AREA OF A TRIANGLE ................................................................................ 24
CONSTRUCTIONS ........................................................................................ 25
TRANSFORMATIONS .................................................................................. 27
SOLUTIONS TO TRIG PROBLEMS FOR 0 < X < 360 ................................. 29
RBW
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TYPES OF TRIANGLE
There are ……………….. types of triangle.
Name Diagram Properties
3
TYPES OF QUADRILATERAL
Name Diagram Properties Square
Rhombus
Rectangle
Parallelogram
Trapezium
Kite
4
TYPES OF POLYGON
Name Diagram Properties Triangle
Quadrilateral
5
PYTHAGORAS’ THEOREM
This theorem only works for……………………………………………………
The side opposite the right angle is called the ………………………………………
Pythagoras’ Theorem says: (hypotenuse)2 = Examples
6
Finding the shorter sides Pythagoras’ Theorem says: (hypotenuse)2 = Examples
Interactive Qns here & here
7
INTERNAL AND EXTERNAL ANGLES
i = internal angle e = external angle
i + e To find the external angle e = To find the internal angle i =
8
Examples Find the external and internal angles of a regular hexagon.
Find the internal angle of a regular 12 sided shape.
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ARCS AND SECTORS Definitions Example 1
Find the length of the minor arc
Find the area of the minor sector
Example 2
Find the angle at the centre.
Find the area of the minor sector
3
40
5
10
10
Common Question A sector of a circle has radius 8cm and an angle of 210° at its centre. The sector is folded up to make a cone. Find the height of the cone and the angle between the cone and the base.
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TRIGONOMETRY 1 This only works for right-angled triangles. 2 Label the sides of the triangle. Example 1 Example 2 Interactive Questions here
10
30
x
12
20
x
12
BEARINGS Basically Pythagoras and Trigonometry (+ sine + cosine rule) Problems Three points to remember 1 2 3 Example A ship sails 20 km on a bearing of 040˚ before turning onto a bearing of 130˚ for 15 km. How far is it from home?
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SIMILAR FIGURES Two figures are mathematically similar if one figure is an enlargement of the other. This means that, for the two figures Angles Lines Examples
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AREAS AND VOLUMES OF SIMILAR FIGURES The diagrams show two cubes. Label the smaller with sides 1cm long and the larger one with sides 5cm long Complete the table Small Cube Large Cube Ratio Length Area Volume
If lengths increase by a factor a, Areas will increase by Volume will increase by Example 1
An Oil Tanker is built so that every length is double that in the original design.
How much more paint will be required for the new tanker than for the original design? How much more oil will it hold than the original design?
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Example 2. A new ‘King Size’ drinks can is to hold twice as much liquid as the standard can. By what percentage must all of the lengths be increased compared to the original can? By what factor will the area have increased compared to the original?
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VOLUME AND AREA FORMULAE Trapezium Area =
Circles Area =
Circumference =
Cylinders
Volume = Area =
Sphere
Volume = Area =
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Prism (Cross section is same all the way through, e.g. cylinder, toblerone, cuboid….)
Volume = CSA x height Pyramids (Cones, tetrahedrons, square-based …. etc
Vol = Cones
Right circular cone
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VECTORS A vector is just a movement between two points. The route is unimportant. A vector has both ‘direction’ and ‘length’ (magnitude) e.g. Examples
Parallel vectors Parallel vectors have the same direction e.g. OA and 5 OA To prove 2 vectors are parallel show that one vector is a multiple of the other Ratio Given that P divides BE in the ratio 3:1 find BP.
AB! "!!
=
BC! "!!
=
CF! "!!
=
A
B
C D
E
F
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Example GCSE Question
OPQR is a parallelogram. S is the midpoint of OR a) Find in terms of a and b (i) (ii) (iii)
T is on PS, so that b) show that T is also on OQ, and find the ratio OT:TQ
OCR Qns here. AQA Qns here. Worksheet here
�
OR
�
OQ
�
PS
�
PT = 23 PS
20
CIRCLE LAWS ‘Angles in the same segment’
Definitions of Terms
Angles starting from the ends of a diameter are always 90˚
NB. 2 radii make isosceles ∆ Angles in a ∆ add to 180˚
Angle of centre = 2 x angle at edge
Intersecting Chords
Cyclic Quadrilateral Opposite angles add to 180˚
Intersecting Chords
AQA A Qns here Online Demo here
21
TANGENT LAWS Equal distance to a point 90˚ to a radius Alternate Segment Theorem
22
SINE AND COSINE RULES SOHCAHTAO (basic trig) only works for Sine and Cosine rules work for Sine rule You must have a complete side-angle pair. Else use Cosine Rule
or
Example 1
Example 2
23
Cosine Rule
To find a Length
Example 1
Example 2 AQA A Trig Qns here
x
6 5
7
24
AREA OF A TRIANGLE You can use the basic formula; But it is often useful to use Common Question Find the area in the shaded segment
25
Constructions You must be able to construct the following;
1 A 60° Angle
2 A Right Angle (Bisector of a Line)
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3 An Angle Bisector
A
B
C
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TRANSFORMATIONS There are four transformations Translation Reflection Rotation Enlargement
Translations – just a ‘shift’ e.g. means 2 along, 4 up
means 1 back, 2 down
Reflections – Need to know reflection lines such as x = 2, y = -1, y = x, y = -x Example; Plot the triangle A with vertices at (3,1) (6,1) and (6,2) Reflect A in the line y = -1 and label your answer B Reflect A in the line y = x and label your answer C
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24⎛
⎝ ⎜ ⎞
⎠ ⎟
�
−1−2⎛
⎝ ⎜
⎞
⎠ ⎟
28
Rotations – Need to know three things: Centre Angle Direction (will usually be worth 3 marks on a GCSE paper) Enlargements – Need to know centre of enlargement and scale factor. Need to know e.g. scale = 2
scale =
scale = – 2 online demo here
Examples Plot triangle ABC at (1,1), (4,1), (3,2).
1. Translate your triangle through and label it 1.
2. Reflect the original triangle in the line y = x and label it 2. 3. Rotate the original triangle 90° clockwise about the point (0,0) and label it 3.
4. Enlarge your triangle, scale factor , centre (-1,-1) and label it 4.
�
12
�
23⎛
⎝ ⎜ ⎞
⎠ ⎟
�
− 12
29
SOLUTIONS TO TRIG PROBLEMS FOR 0 < x < 360 The Sine Curve Sketch the graph of y = sin(x) on the axes below.
Hence use the graph to find all solutions between x = 0 and 360 to
30
The Cosine Curve Sketch the graph of y = cos(x) on the axes below.
Hence use the graph to find all solutions between x = 0 and 360 to